Lacey Wildd (born Paula Ann Simonds on April 23, 1968) is an American reality television personality, glamour model and B movie actress, who is well known for her extreme body modifications and bust proportion. She has been publicized in reality television and tabloid publications. Wildd rose to some prominence when she was featured on MTV's award-winning documentary series True Life.
Wildd has spent over $250,000 on breast augmentation surgeries. Originally an A cup, she has since moved to an LLL cup. To achieve this, Wildd has had 12 separate surgeries. As of mid 2014, Wildd is preparing for a surgery to move to a QQQ cup. To avoid harassment, she has not released the name of the doctor that will be performing the surgery. She has reported that she will be traveling to Brazil, a country well known for medical tourism, to complete the surgery.
To support her breast augmentations, Wildd had to have pig skin sewed inside her abdomen. She stated that "it feels like guitar strings." She has also had to have an internal bra surgery to support her breasts and make sure that her skin could support them.
Lacey may refer to:
The Lacy Dog or Blue Lacy Dog is a breed of working dog that originated in Texas in the mid-19th century. The Lacy was first recognized in 2001 by the Texas Senate. In Senate Resolution No. 436, the 77th Legislature honored the Lacy as "a true Texas breed". In June 2005, Governor Rick Perry signed the legislation adopting the Blue Lacy as "the official State Dog Breed of Texas". As expected, the vast majority of Lacy dogs are found in Texas. However, as the breed becomes more well recognized, there are breeding populations being established across the United States, Canada, and most recently in Europe.
Lacy dogs are strong and fast, lightly built but proportional within the height-to-weight ratio. Height at the withers is from 43 to 56 cm (17 to 22 in). Dependent on height and general conditioning, weight should be approximately 11 to 20 kg (25 to 45 lb) for females and 16 to 25 kg (35 to 55 lb) for males. The standards listed in the Texas House Concurrent Resolution No. 108 are slightly different: height between 46 to 64 cm (18 to 25 in), weight between 14 to 23 kg (30 to 50 lb) but it was not until 2005 that it was official.
The Centennial Station (also known as Olympia–Lacey) is a train station located immediately south of Lacey, Washington, United States that also serves the capital city of Olympia. The station is served by Amtrak's (the National Railroad Passenger Corporation) Amtrak Cascades and Coast Starlight.
Local transit connections are provided by Intercity Transit. Bus routes 64 and 94 connect to Lacey and Olympia Transit centers.
The original Union Pacific station at East Olympia was demolished in the late 1960s. It was used by the pool trains that ran between Seattle and Portland by all three railroads that used the line, Northern Pacific, Great Northern, and Union Pacific. Amtrak trains during the 1970s and 1980s used a wooden shelter as East Olympia's passenger train station, however the station site was remote and had no public transport, no lighting and a pot-holed gravel parking lot with a public telephone that rarely worked.
The new Centennial Station was built by the non-profit Amtrak Depot Committee and opened in early 1993 following a six-year fundraising and lobbying effort by citizens of Thurston County. It is believed to be the only Amtrak station in the nation operated and built entirely by volunteers.
This town, is a lonely town
Not the only town, like this town
This town, is a make you town
Or a break you town and bring you down town
This town, is a quiet town
Or a riot town, like this town
This town, is a love you town
And a shove you down and push you 'round town
[Instrumental]
This town well it's an all right town
For an uptight town, like this town
This town, it's a use you town